Determinants of the Differential Pricing between Voting and Non-Voting Shares in Brazil'

Authors

  • Richard Saito Professor, Escola de Administração de Empresas de São Paulo, Fundação Getulio Vargas

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12660/bre.v23n12003.2732

Keywords:

Voting and Non-voting Shares, Private Benefits, Liquidity, Ownership Structure, Brazil .

Abstract

Several papers suggest that private benefits can explain the differential pricing between share classes with differential voting rights. However, in Brazil the price differential between voting and non-voting shares has been negative for several companies between July 1994 and September 2002. This paper investigates the determinants that imply this discount of voting shares vis-à-vis non-voting shares. Particularly, the paper analyzes the impacts of liquidity, dividend differential, and recent changes in legislation of the Brazilian public equity market on the voting premium. This paper ratifies that liquidity is extremely relevant to the determination of relative prices. In addition, empirical evidence confirms a negative impact of Law 9457 - revoking voting minority shareholders' tag along rights - and a positive impact of the introduction of Law 10303 - reinstating those rights to minority voting shareholders. Finally, ownership structure confirmed a positive relationship with the voting premium, but the major shareholders' voting share participation has not presented a significant relationship as in other countries.

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Published

2003-05-01

Issue

Section

Articles